The Morning Dispatch: Will Trump Use Executive Orders to Handle COVID Relief?

Plus, why the GOP is suing states over election laws.

Happy Friday! We think (knock on wood) we just made it through our first “slow news week” since we first launched this newsletter 10 months ago. Probably our last one for a while, too. Buckle up!

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States confirmed 58,177 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 8.2 percent of the 731,700 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,841 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 160,090.

  • Army Chief of Staff Gen. James McConville announced that as part of President Trump’s troop drawdown from Germany and subsequent realignment the U.S. Army V Corps headquarters group will be going to Krakow, Poland in 2021.
  • Initial jobless claims dropped approximately 250,000 week-over-week to 1.2 million for the week ending on August 1, according to Labor Department data. It was the 20th straight week more than 1 million Americans applied for unemployment insurance.
  • The Commission on Presidential Debates rejected a Trump campaign request to add a fourth debate before to the start of early voting. “There is a difference between ballots having been issued by a state and those ballots having been cast by voters, who are under no compulsion to return their ballots before the debates,” the commission wrote, adding it would “consider [a] request” for a fourth debate if both candidates agreed to it.
  • New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a lawsuit aimed at dissolving the National Rifle Association—which is incorporated in New York—after an 18-month investigation reportedly revealed extensive financial misconduct within the organization resulting in the loss of more than $64 million over a three-year span.
  • President Trump issued two executive orders late Thursday night targeting Chinese-owned social media apps TikTok and WeChat. The orders prohibit—beginning in 45 days—“any transaction that is related to WeChat [or TikTok] by any person, or with respect to any property, subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, with Tencent Holdings Ltd [or ByteDance Ltd.].” Microsoft remains in talks to buy TikTok, and now has 45 days to do so.
  • The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, which began in June, will be “extremely active,” according to a revised forecast by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Before November 30, the agency predicts 19 to 25 “named storms,” of which seven to 11 are expected to become hurricanes.
  • Former ambassador to Japan Bill Hagerty, the favorite of the Trump GOP establishment, beat out political outsider Manny Sethi in Tennessee’s Republican Senate primary on Thursday, all but assuring he will replace retiring Sen. Lamar Alexander in January.
  • Just months after the USMCA trade deal went into effect, the Trump administration is reimposing 10 percent tariffs on Canadian aluminum imports, reportedly because Canada refused to limit the amount of the metal it exported to the United States.

Trump Gets Cozy With His Pen and Phone

Another day has come and gone with no coronavirus aid deal in Congress, and one thing is quite clear: This is the White House’s fight now. Although the Senate will technically stay in session next week in hopes a deal will be struck, most senators have already headed home for the August recess. Party leaders remain in Washington to continue butting heads.

We reported yesterday that Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been content to permit the White House to take the reins on negotiations with Democratic leaders. But President Trump showed impatience with the proceedings again Thursday, suggesting, as he has several times this week, that he might use executive orders to get what he wants.

There are two major takeaways from this. The first is that President Trump has apparently decided that if he’s going to be in the driver’s seat for negotiations, he might as well just shoot for the policy priorities he’s wanted all along. A payroll tax cut is something the president’s wanted to make part of the COVID relief package for months—but which McConnell managed to keep out of the GOP proposal when it was released last month.

The Coming Legal Fight Over Mail-In Voting

The Trump campaign and Republican National Committee sued the state of Nevada earlier this week after Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak signed into law a bill that will send official ballots to all registered voters in the state before the presidential election this November. In a piece for the site, Audrey talked to representatives from the RNC, Republican National Lawyers Association, and the Nevada Republican Party to figure out why they’re so upset.

What, exactly, did Nevada do?

Passed a bill that will send official ballots to all registered voters in the state before the presidential election this November. This marks the eighth state—in addition to D.C.—to adopt universal, unsolicited mail-in voting for the election over pandemic concerns. Nevada’s new law means that before the election, the state will mail ballots to every voter on its voting rolls, including in those ballots prepaid postage for their return.

“Today, I signed AB 4, which ensures protections for Nevadans to vote safely at the November election during the pandemic,” Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak tweeted Monday. “During this global pandemic, I made a commitment that we’d do all we can to allow Nevadans to safely cast a ballot in the upcoming November election.”

What do Republicans see as the problem with this?

“Voter rolls are notoriously not accurate,” said David Warrington, president of the Republican National Lawyers Association, in an interview with The Dispatch. “The error rate on voter rolls can swing pretty dramatically depending on where you are, because you have people who die, you have people that move, you have people that change addresses, leave the state,” he said. “There are various other reasons why somebody whose name may be on the voter roll today may not actually be an eligible voter to vote in that state.”

Nevada Republicans are up arms about the bill. “When you have a leadership that decides to change the election laws less than 100 days out from the election, obviously there’s an agenda put on the plate,” said Nevada GOP Chairman Michael McDonald in an interview with The Dispatch. “They had a 100-page bill that was drafted up, and clearly was drafted up by some D.C. lawyer, this is nothing that came out of Nevada. It was a back room, smoke-filled, however you want to put it, dirty bill that was dropped.”

Worth Your Time

  • In 1945, John Hersey travelled to the devastated city of Hiroshima and reminded the world of journalism’s power to shatter apathy and cultivate compassion. At a time when Americans were relieved to see the end of history’s deadliest conflict, Hersey gave the first atomic bombing a human vantage point by capturing the stories of its survivors in a heartbreaking collection simply titled “Hiroshima.” 75 years later, Lesley M.M. Blume remembers the work of Hersey in this essay for the Wall Street Journal. “Hersey hoped to drive home the gruesome reality behind those impersonal numbers,” she writes. “As a war reporter, he had witnessed the worst in human nature, and he thought that our species’ best chance for survival in the atomic age rested on making people see the humanity in one another again.”
  • In our increasingly polarized world, genuine, good-faith political debate between people who strongly disagree is so rare that when you do find it, you want to hold on and never let go. Conservative New York Times columnist Ross Douthat commandeered the editorial board’s podcast this week while two of his more liberal co-hosts were on vacation. In their stead, he invited on two pro-Trump writers—Daniel McCarthy and Helen Andrews—for a spirited discussion about the president’s handling of the pandemic, what 2020 outcome is best for the conservative cause, and what Trumpism could look like after Trump himself.
  • “Racism makes a liar of God,” Gloria Purvis told Elizabeth Bruenig for the latter’s piece on how the Catholic Church is grappling with the protests in the wake of George Floyd’s death. “It says not everyone is made in his image. What a horrible lie from the pit of hell.” Protesters tearing down Catholic statues—and even vandalizing some churches—have understandably turned many Catholics off of today’s anti-racism movement. But Purvis—a black Catholic who hosts a faith-based radio show—believes Catholicism calls for something more. “I don’t think a lot of people realize racism is a sin,” she says. “We are being called to love our neighbor … and my God, my God, we are failing.”

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Trump said Joe Biden will ‘hurt God’ if elected

Toeing the Company Line

  • David’s latest French Press (🔒) takes a closer look at the killing of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old woman shot dead by Louisville police serving a no-knock warrant in March. His conclusion? “Supreme Court precedents killed Breonna Taylor. These court precedents have killed before,” he writes. “Unless there are substantial legal reforms, those precedents will kill again.”
  • David discusses his piece with Sarah on yesterday’s episode of Advisory Opinions, which also features conversations about voter scores and voter modeling on political campaigns, the Michael Flynn case, subpoenas for Trump’s financial records, and the Hatch Act.
  • The second part of Meghan McArdle’s two-part Remnant appearance was released into the world yesterday. Tune in for a continuation of her conversation with Jonah from earlier this week: Coronavirus punditry, veepstakes speculation, GDP numbers, and New York City.
  • On the site today, Akino Yamashita provides a physician’s perspective on that cognitive test that Trump still hasn’t stopped talking about “acing.” For all the jokes about how simple it is, it does provide doctors with important information.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

Photograph by Samuel Corum/Getty Images.